20000 Leagues Under the Sea
4.2711 votes
✒ Author | Jules Verne |
📖 Pages | 690 |
⏰ Reading time | 17 hours 45 minutes |
💡 Originally published | 1870 |
🌏 Original language | French |
📌 Type | Novels |
📌 Genres | Adventure, Fantastic Fiction |
📌 Section | Adventure novel |
Table of contents
Expand
Work in other languages
Read the book
FIRST PART
Chapter 1. A Runaway Reef
THE YEAR 1866 was marked by a bizarre development, an unexplained and downright inexplicable phenomenon that surely no one has forgotten. Without getting into those rumors that upset civilians in the seaports and deranged the public mind even far inland, it must be said that professional seamen were especially alarmed. Traders, shipowners, captains of vessels, skippers, and master mariners from Europe and America, naval officers from every country, and at their heels the various national governments on these two continents, were all extremely disturbed by the business.
In essence, over a period of time several ships had encountered "an enormous thing" at sea, a long spindle–shaped object, sometimes giving off a phosphorescent glow, infinitely bigger and faster than any whale.
The relevant data on this apparition, as recorded in various logbooks, agreed pretty closely as to the structure of the object or creature in question, its unprecedented speed of movement, its startling locomotive power, and the unique vitality with which it seemed to be gifted. If it was a cetacean, it exceeded in bulk any whale previously classified by science. No naturalist, neither Cuvier nor Lacépède, neither Professor Dumeril nor Professor de Quatrefages, would have accepted the existence of such a monster sight unseen — specifically, unseen by their own scientific eyes.
Striking an average of observations taken at different times — rejecting those timid estimates that gave the object a length of 200 feet, and ignoring those exaggerated views that saw it as a mile wide and three long — you could still assert that this phenomenal creature greatly exceeded the dimensions of anything then known to ichthyologists, if it existed at all.
Now then, it did exist, this was an undeniable fact; and since the human mind dotes on objects of wonder, you can understand the worldwide excitement caused by this unearthly apparition. As for relegating it to the realm of fiction, that charge had to be dropped.
In essence, on July 20, 1866, the steamer Governor Higginson, from the Calcutta & Burnach Steam Navigation Co., encountered this moving mass five miles off the eastern shores of Australia.
Captain Baker at first thought he was in the presence of an unknown reef; he was even about to fix its exact position when two waterspouts shot out of this inexplicable object and sprang hissing into the air some 150 feet. So, unless this reef was subject to the intermittent eruptions of a geyser, the Governor Higginson had fair and honest dealings with some aquatic mammal, until then unknown, that could spurt from its blowholes waterspouts mixed with air and steam.
Page 1 of 690
You can use the left and right keys on the keyboard to navigate between book pages.
Suggest a quote
Download the book for free in PDF, FB2, EPUb, DOC and TXT
Download the free e-book by Jules Verne, «20000 Leagues Under the Sea» , in English. You can also print the text of the book. For this, the PDF and DOC formats are suitable.
You may be interested in
Be the first to comment
AddAdd comment